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wwilim | 1 year ago

eh, I had a brief glimmer of hope

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tj-teej|1 year ago

As a T1D I empathize so strongly with this comment.

There was a promising example in China where Scientists cured a single woman who had T1D. It's n=1, but the first step to a cure is curing someone :)

Source: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03129-3

caseyy|1 year ago

There is a study running for this in the UK currently [0], and I expect there are worldwide studies running now. This is the time for those interested and eligible to register. But for the rest of us, the treatment seems to be inevitable now. The question is how long until it's proven safe, the red tape is cut through, and it enters the market. I would speculate, unless something catastrophic happens, it should be available within 10 years.

No doubt, the current T1D market players will have created some legal moat, so it might be best for the patients if these companies are the ones to bring the treatment to the market. But we shall see - the current big pharma in diabetes space is heavily invested in drug production rather than implantation procedures. It is a very different business model requiring very different facilities, management, and technology.

[0] https://www.diabetes.org.uk/our-research/get-involved/take-p...

mapt|1 year ago

Immunology & autoimmune attack is still a wild country where discoveries are being made regularly and only a handful of people have even a rough grasp of the terrain.

sooheon|1 year ago

Amazing. Since the cells are injected into the abdomen, she essentially grew a new insulin producing pseudo-pancreas in her abs.

1123581321|1 year ago

n=3 but the other two haven’t been monitored for a year yet. Promising.